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The Ultimate DV Editing Station – Part 3– Evaluation

By: Brian Burnham

Now, with Assembly and Troubleshooting under our belt, lets throw down our votes on what was and what wasn’t what we needed.

Power Macintosh G4 (867 MHz)

Apple Final Cut Pro 2.0

Matrox RTMac

I hope these evaluations will be useful. Remember this is not the final word. Be sure and share your opinions with your fellow Mac Professionals in the MacMerc Forums.

Thank you for tuning in. MacMerc’s highest priority is providing you with the information you need to be successful.

Free Blogware

Personal web logging is the Internet’s newest craze. To do it right you’ll want the best tools. Check out my picks for Mac blogging…

The Service

In order to blog, you’ll need to sign up for the service with one of several providers (unless you are on a server that supports scripting, then you can run your own). Blogger, arguably the best of the bunch, actually creates your blog and FTP’s it to your site. As an option, you can host your blog for free with them, but for an off-site blog I might look into Blog-City or tBLOG. They are both free, but won’t likely work with the software below.

The Software

While not required, client-side software can make posting content to your blog site quicker and easier. My favorite posting tool is BlogScript. This is a simple AppleScript that remembers your login information and quickly posts the contents of your clipboard to your blog.

For more features you may want to try BlogWorkz or iBlog. Both are more robust applications that allow easy posting to your blog, but I found them less consistent than the simple script.

Direct RSS

Blogging not your thing? How about creating your own RSS news feed? RSS feeds can be subscribed to by a slew of news readers. Direct RSS allows you to create and maintain your own RSS feed. It even takes care of the uploading (though that part didn’t work so well for me) and saves a local version of your .rss file to your hard drive.

Now that you’re all hooked up with the tools, you can express yourself with easy on the web. Now all you need is something to say. But I’ll leave that up to you.

Brian

Finding Stuff

This week, we’ll look at free software that reveals hidden files and a wealth of information on the Internet.

mu Finding StuffInVisibles

Make your invisible files visible with a double-click. This application gives you useful (but potentially dangerous) power over the underpinnings of the OS.

mu Finding StuffiWiki

Search the Wikipedia, one of the largest free collections of information from your menubar.

mu Finding StuffMrClean

Search your hard drive for duplicate files and delete them. This free application compares files on a number of criteria, allowing you to identify and get rid of useless duplicates.

mu Finding Stuffdelicious2safari

Access your del.icio.us bookmarks in Safari, with multiple options for organizing them.

I hope you’ve found something useful in this week’s bunch of freeware. If not, keep looking and I’ll meet you back here next week.

Brian

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